What’s Happening?
Keith Waltz, a well-known and long-tenured motorsports writer, has passed away at the age of 65.
Waltz held numerous roles…
Here is what drivers had to say after Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway:
Austin Cindric — Winner: “It takes everything and we’ve had it so many races here and you’ve got to have a little bit more. I’m just so proud of everybody on this race team. Team Penske, the entire shop deserves wins at these racetracks with how fast our race cars are and I’m just so proud to be able to win for John Menard and the Menards team – to get this yellow car in Victory Lane and get in the playoffs. … You’re waiting for it to go wrong (on the final laps), but you’ve got to stay in the zone. There are so many times at the end I was just focused on the feedback (spotter) Doug Campbell was giving me and what I knew about our car and maybe other cars I observed throughout the field today, so just an absolutely fantastic job by everybody involved.”
Austin Cindric scored his third career victory and first of the season Sunday at Talladega.
Ryan Preece — Finished 2nd: “We did all we could. I felt like we executed stage three exactly like we needed to. We came out in the front of our group and worked our way through that traffic. We had the opportunity to get to the top lane and then from there it was just managing those cars behind us and not giving up what we gained. I’m really proud of everybody at RFK for this race car. I’m just really super appreciative from Jack, Brad, the Fenway Group for this opportunity. Honestly, without Kroger and BAM and Celsius and a lot of the other partners today, I’d probably be back in Connecticut. I’m really excited about the rest of this year. It’s a great day, but I wanted to win.”
Austin Cindric beat Ryan Preece by .022 seconds to earn his first victory of the season.
Kyle Larson — Finished 3rd: “There wasn’t really much I could do the final five laps. I wanted to go to the outside lane when we got clear of William (Byron), but I felt like the gap was too big to move up and the No. 60 (Ryan Preece) was able to fill it. I was still happy to be second row on the inside lane, obviously happy to be front row, but I just didn’t know how it was going to play out from there. There at the end, you’re just trying to give the right pushes to get clear and then maybe he starts blocking lanes and something would open up for me. I was just kind of jammed up there. I will take a third-place finish. We had a great day, points-wise, for this No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet team. Winning the first stage was a bit unexpected, and then finishing third in the second stage from where we were on the final restart was also unexpected. Just a really good day, overall, for the No. 5 HendrickCars.com Chevy.”
William Byron — Finished 4th: “I don’t know about that. We had the No. 48 (Alex Bowman) behind us and he was doing a good job pushing. It just seemed like we couldn’t get enough help from the third guy in line and that’s what it takes. For whatever reason, the top lane just couldn’t get the runs off the corner at the right time to get connected. We’d get connected too late and then get a little bit squirrely and lose our momentum. I wish just that one time, we could have connected a little better to stay even with the bottom lane, but we were working really hard to do that with the No. 2 (Austin Cindric). It just seemed like it took a lot of effort for us to maintain the track position on the front row. Live and learn. The No. 24 Valvoline Chevrolet team did a good job today. We had some issues and had to work on it. We got it better and then we were able to race there in the final stage, so really happy with that. We always want a little bit more. I feel like we were in the perfect position there with 10 laps to go.”
Joey Logano — Finished 5th: “Yeah, it’s all about the cycle and then once it got two-by-two there you’re kind of there just watching it all happen in front of you and you really don’t play much of a part. You just hope that your lane clears enough to where you can possibly make a move, but there are no lanes to make a move there. We just got beat on the cycle there. I’m not even really sure exactly how yet. I have to go back and look at it, but, overall, it was a solid day for the Shell/Pennzoil Ford. We almost had a stage win and a top five, so I can’t be too frustrated with that I guess.”
Highlights: NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega
Watch highlights from the NASCAR Cup Series Jack Link’s 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.
Noah Gragson — Finished 6th: “We were in the third row on the outside and was trying to keep Cindric out front and keep the outside lane that I was in from getting there and then the 60 (Ryan Preece) was able to pull up and we had two Fords out front. I’m happy for Ford and Penske for the win, but this is a good reset and good points today after the first 10 races of the season. We haven’t had the results we want, so it’s a good reset after the off weekend and a good way to start off the next part of the season.”
Bubba Wallace — Finished 10th: “I don’t really know what to think as I think we were all waiting for a big wreck there at the end and it never happened. We ended up 10th, so that’s a good day for us. We didn’t need a new winner, but congrats to Austin (Cindric). All-in-all, our Leidos Toyota Camry was pretty solid today. Was nice not having to riding around, running half throttle and save fuel. We did at times, but not as much. Clean race and now, onto Texas.”
Daniel Suarez — Finished 11th: “It was an up-and-down day for the No. 99 Wendy’s Frosty Chevrolet team. I wasn’t in love with the balance of the car. I thought the speed was decent, but I just felt like the balance of the car, we have a little bit of work to do to fight consistently at the front. We made a couple of mistakes on pit road, but when it counted the most at the end, we executed well.”
Michael McDowell — Finished 13th: “Not the day we were hoping for at Talladega. Our No. 71 GUNK Chevrolet was fast. Early on in the race, we were able to get to the lead and kind of control the lanes. We just lost track position there at the end and never could really get it back. It was unfortunate, but we learned a lot this weekend. We’ll keep plugging away at it. Not what we hoped for, but we’ll take a solid finish and move onto Texas.”
Erik Jones — Finished 20th: “It’s hard to win from 15th or 20th, but we had a plan to organize and couldn’t get it going. So from there, I just rode in line. It would have been nice to see if we could have gotten the top going, but we didn’t. Not much you can do about it.”
Ty Dillon — Finished 25th: “We were having a pretty smooth day with our No. 10 Sea Best Chevy and our car was fast. We did our job on pit road pretty much and on the track, we put ourselves in position and where we needed to be at the end. We were running in seventh and ran out of the gas. We’ve got to get that cleaned up. Running out of gas has robbed us of a lot of finishing positions and points over the last two weeks. We’ve shown a lot of really good speed on the super speedways, and that’s been really good. It’s nice to see the hard work paying off when we show up at the track. We’ll keep grinding and the finishes we deserve will come.”
AJ Allmendinger — Finished 26th: “Overall, our day was going well. We were racing our own race there of hanging back and going at the end of the stages. That worked out for the first stage, almost worked out for the second stage and I thought we were in a decent position in the third stage. We ended up with a combination of bad luck and not a great last stop at the end, just having to go around the No. 1 car and everything that happened there. That cost us there at the end and that’s disappointing.”
John Hunter Nemechek — Finished 32nd: “Overall, we just didn’t execute all day. We win and lose as a team. We’ll go back and review what we need to do better, the things that were positive, and try to get our superspeedway packages better.”
Cody Ware — Finished 33rd: “I think that today we showed from green flag to checkered flag that we were a race-winning contender today. I’m really proud of the pit crew and the road crew and everybody back at the shop for building a super fast Arby’s Barbeque Ford Mustang. I’m really dejected with how the day ended. I sped leaving pit road, but we also ran out of fuel, too, so our fate was kind of sealed after that last pit stop no matter what. I’ll work on the things I need to work on and I know the team is going to work on the things they need to work on and we just need to move forward knowing that we can do this. We just have to keep digging.”
Hard hits for Bell, Buescher coming up to speed
Christopher Bell gets a bump from teammate Denny Hamlin with the field coming up to speed at Talladega, but the No. 20 gets sent into Chris Buescher, and both drivers suffer hard impacts.
Chris Buescher — Finished 36th: “Everything was great out the windshield. I have no clue what happened yet. I imagine it was a bad push. That’s all it can really be. I know we’re all going for it there at the end. We’re in a great spot with our Travel Centers Ford Mustang. We had our teammate behind us. We had fuel to go wide-open and not worry about it all the way to the end of that stage and it certainly didn’t work out. I don’t know what happened at this point. I’m assuming we were just two-wide. I have no clue to really say, but we had worked really well with Preece early on in the race and had been really smart about how we linked up and got to pushing and it worked really well for us. We were right there off the corner, just kind of backing up to him to receive that first big push down the back and just seen the 20 come across the nose. Until I dive into it, I don’t know anything else yet.”
Christopher Bell — Finished 37th: “Whenever you’re the car getting pushed, you’re completely at the mercy of the guy behind you. You know, Denny (Hamlin) didn’t do anything wrong. You have to push, you have to push to be successful. It’s a product of the cars we race with this rules package.”
Pit road mess collects Keselowski, Busch at ‘Dega
The first yellow of the Jack Link’s 500 waves for Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch as both drivers check up coming to pit road during the first round of green flag pit stops.
Brad Keselowski — Finished 38th: “It was just a stack of guys trying to come to pit road as fast as they could and we were kind of the ham in the sandwich that got squeezed. I waved down the backstretch to let everybody know I was gonna pit and I came off of four and everybody was so tight behind me that I didn’t even have a chance to turn left. I hate that it ruined not just our day, but several other people’s day. I don’t think I could do anything different.”
Ryan Blaney — Finished 39th: “We just broke too many pieces in the right-rear. That took all the damage. The right-rear wheel and it broke everything. We couldn’t fix it, unfortunately, but I don’t really know. I kind of saw a little bit of a replay. It looked like a group of guys trying to get to pit road and maybe some guys not knowing that they were coming to pit road and not giving them any room. I saw the 8 (Kyle Busch) and 6 (Brad Keselowski) kind of get hooked together and they were going up the track, so I kind of picked the bottom and tried to get out of there and I think they clipped someone outside of them and the 6 came back into me and I got clipped in the right-rear. Oh gosh, man, another DNF. It just sucks. Just when we were kind of getting our momentum and didn’t even get to race today. We’ll just move on to Texas.”
Fairfield, OH — The International Hot Rod Association (IHRA) has officially completed the acquisition of the historic motorsports facility in Millington, Tennessee, formerly known as Memphis International Raceway and Memphis Motorsports Park, closing on the property on December 23, 2025.
Originally opened in the late 1980s, the facility has played a significant role in American motorsports history. It has hosted major drag racing events and national touring series and was, at one point, sanctioned by IHRA, hosting IHRA-sanctioned drag racing events during that time. With the property now under IHRA ownership, the acquisition represents a full-circle moment that reconnects the track’s past with a renewed vision for its future.
The facility has long contributed to tourism and economic activity in Millington and Shelby County. Under IHRA ownership, it will operate as a multi-use destination supporting drag racing, stock car competition, grassroots motorsports, and other large-scale events that engage the broader community and region.
“This investment honors the legacy of Memphis Motorsports Park while positioning it for a strong future. IHRA’s acquisition reflects confidence in our region and creates new opportunities for tourism, local businesses, and fan experiences.” said Mayor Paul Young, City of Memphis.
“As the Commissioner for District 1, I am thrilled about IHRA’s acquisition of Memphis Motorsports Park. This investment strengthens our local economy, puts world-class racing back on solid ground, and gives our families and young people a safe, exciting place to create memories for years to come. Having a national organization like IHRA committed to the long-term success of this historic facility is exactly the kind of partnership Shelby County needs.” said Amber Mills, Shelby County Commissioner, District 1, Shelby County Government.
“Memphis Motorsports Park has long contributed to tourism and economic activity in Millington and Shelby County, and IHRA’s acquisition represents a positive step forward for the facility and the community. This investment supports the continued use of the track as a regional destination while creating opportunities for local businesses and future growth. The Millington Area Chamber of Commerce looks forward to working with IHRA as this next chapter takes shape.” said Chris Thomas, Executive Director, Millington Area Chamber of Commerce.
“This is a special place in American motorsports,” said Darryl Cuttell, CEO of IHRA. “This facility has a deep history in drag racing and stock car competition, and our goal is to honor that legacy while building a strong, sustainable future. We are committed to bringing meaningful racing back to this property while expanding its role as a destination for a wide range of events that serve racers, fans, and the surrounding community.”
“This acquisition represents more than reopening a racetrack,” said Leah Martin, President of IHRA. “It is about restoring opportunity for racers, families, and the community. This facility aligns with IHRA’s racer-first vision and our commitment to grassroots motorsports, while also allowing the property to support diverse uses that strengthen its year-round impact.”
“Memphis Motorsports Park holds a special place in our hearts,” said Daniel Horton, Assistant Director of the IHRA Stock Car Series. “Bobby Hamilton won the 2004 Craftsman Truck Series race here in a truck built by Tim and with Danny as the crew chief. With the facility now under the IHRA umbrella, we can give grassroots racers a chance to compete where legendary drivers such as Kevin Harvick, Randy LaJoie, and the late Greg Biffle have won. We are extremely excited to bring stock car racing back to Memphis and continue the legacy of this iconic track.”
In the coming days, IHRA will begin facility improvements and operational preparations. Fans and community members are encouraged to follow IHRA across its social media platforms for updates and behind-the-scenes coverage as revitalization efforts get underway. Further announcements regarding schedules and programming will be released in the near future.
As 2025 comes to a close, we ask you to take a moment with us to remember those in the NASCAR family who passed away during the past calendar year.
Born: 1948 | Died: February 6, 2025
Hinton was a long-time motorsports and sports writer for several publications during his lengthy career, including Sports Illustrated and ESPN.
Born: 1942 | Died: April 9, 2025
Pearce was a long-time staple of NASCAR media known for his time with Autoweek, where he recently served as the brand’s NASCAR editor. During his career, he covered 56 consecutive Daytona 500s, including the race’s 67th edition earlier this year.
What’s Happening?
Keith Waltz, a well-known and long-tenured motorsports writer, has passed away at the age of 65.
Waltz held numerous roles…
Born: 1960 | Died: September 27, 2025
Waltz served in many roles, both as a journalist and as a PR representative in the sport. During his time in the sport, Waltz worked for publications like Speed Sport and NASCAR Pole Position Magazine, and as a member of the communications team at Charlotte Motor Speedway. In 2025, prior to his passing, Waltz tied Ted Schmidt for the Jim Hunter Writer of the Year award at the 52nd Annual Eastern Motorsport Press Association.
Born: 1955 | Died: September 6, 2025
During his NASCAR career, Bird only called the shots for one NASCAR Cup Series race, as his true success would be found in the NASCAR Busch Series. Across his ten seasons in the series, Bird, atop the box for drivers like Rob Moroso, Kenny Wallace, Johnny Benson Jr., and Randy LaJoie, won 18 total races and three series championships.
What’s Happening?
Members of the NASCAR garage area are sharing their thoughts and memories of late NASCAR crew member Zachary Yager,…
Born: 1990 | Died: August 23, 2025
Yager was well known around the NASCAR garage area for his time with many teams across the sport’s National Series. In recent seasons, Yager found himself with teams like Team Penske and JTG Daugherty Racing, winning the Daytona 500 as a member of JTG’s No. 47 crew in 2023, and was serving as a member of ThorSport Racing’s No. 88 team at the time of his passing.
What’s Happening?
Shigeaki Hattori, owner of the part-time NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team Hattori Racing Enterprises, passed away Saturday morning following…
Born: 1963 | Died: April 5, 2025
Hattori, a racer in his own right, went on to own one of the more fan-favorite operations in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series of the past decade after hanging up his helmet. From 2013 to 2024, Hattori Racing Enterprises fielded the likes of Brett Moffitt and Ryan Truex, among others, to 14 wins and the 2018 series championship alongside entries in the ARCA Menards and NASCAR Xfinity Series. He was 61.
Born: 1947 | Died: January 13, 2025
Baumgardner was a long-time owner of the NASCAR Busch Series team BACE Motorsports, with his drivers, including but not limited to Johnny Benson Jr, Randy LaJoie, and Tony Raines, entering 389 races from 1993 to 2004, collecting 16 wins and three series championships along the way.
Born: 1949 | Died: June 10, 2025
Carter served as a Crew Chief for many of NASCAR’s top drivers in the 1970s and 1980s, including an eight-year run calling the shots for Harry Gant, where the pair won nine total races. However, after his days atop the pit box came to a close, the NASCAR Cup Series Champion moved to ownership,
Born: 1937 | Died: June 14, 2025
Henderson fielded entries across NASCAR’s National Series for many years. However, his true impact on the sport would come with Henderson Motorsports’ run in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, which began in 2013. Since their first season in the Truck Series, Henderson’s team has served as one of the most competitive part-time underdogs in the sport, winning two races, including a third that NASCAR disqualified in the 2025 season opener.
Born: 1944 | Died: June 25, 2025
McClure owned one of the most iconic cars in NASCAR history, with his team, Morgan McClure Motorsports, co-owned by Tim Morgan, fielding the No. 4 car in the NASCAR Cup Series from 1987 to 2007, with sponsor Kodak gracing the car’s hood for the majority of that run. In total, the team won an impressive 14 races with the likes of Ernie Irvan, Sterling Marlin, and Bobby Hamilton, including three Daytona 500s between Irvan and Marlin.
Born: 1951 | Died: September 7, 2025
Davis was one of the most influential owners of the late 1990s and early 2000s in the NASCAR Cup Series, with his team giving many drivers, like Bobby Labonte, Ward Burton, and Dave Blaney, their first real shot at the sport’s highest division. Over his 16 years racing in the highest level of NASCAR, the team won five races, including the 2002 Daytona 500 with Sterling Marlin.
Born: 1958 | Died: January 17, 2025
Truex Sr. was a true racing legend of the northeastern racing scene, making over 135 starts in the former NASCAR Busch North Series, now known as the ARCA Menards Series West. His legacy continued into NASCAR, where his sons Martin Truex Jr. and Ryan Truex have won races and championships across the sport’s three national series.
Born: 1937 | Died: February 2, 2025
Andrews was a long-time racer who made many starts in the NASCAR Cup and the now-defunct Grand National East Series and NASCAR Grand American Series, winning the 1972 series title in the latter of the two.
Born: 1952 | Died: April 18, 2025
During his time in NASCAR, Chase was one of the stars of the sport’s grassroots levels, though he would make the occasional start in the National Series. In his efforts racing in lower divisions of the sport, Chase won 19 races and a 1997 series championship in the NASCAR Southwest Tour, and 10 races, and the 1994 series championship in the NASCAR Winston West Series.
Born: 1929 | Died: July 18, 2025
White was one of the sport’s greatest drivers during the early days of NASCAR. From 1956 to 1964, White won 28 races and scored 163 top ten finishes in 233 career starts. In 1960, the future NASCAR Hall of Famer scored six wins, 25 top fives, and 35 top tens en route to his first and only NASCAR Cup Series Championship.
Born: 1937 | Died: September 2, 2025
Though he only made 23 career starts in the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR fans remember Barkdoll as a true underdog of the sport, with his Barkdoll Racing No. 73 serving as an early iteration of what modern fans would now call an “open car.”
What’s Happening?
The NASCAR community is mourning the loss of former Xfinity and Cup Series driver Michael Annett, who has passed…
Born: 1986 | Died: December 2, 2025
Annett played the role of a journeyman driver during his NASCAR career, racing across the three National Series from 2008 to 2016, before finally settling down in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, where he raced for JR Motorsports from 2017 to 2021. During his time with JRM, Annett found his groove, making the playoffs three times and finally winning his first career race at Daytona in 2019. He retired from racing after the 2021 season.
Born: 1969 | Died: December 18, 2025
Throughout his NASCAR career, Biffle proved himself to be a true wheelman, winning in everything he got behind the wheel of, including 17 wins and a series championship in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, 20 wins and a series championship in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, and 19 wins in the NASCAR Cup Series. One of the most impressive moments of his racing career came at Texas Motor Speedway in 2019, when he won in his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series start since 2004, and his first race since retiring from full-time action in 2016.
Biffle and his family, alongside three others, lost their lives in a plane crash in Statesville, North Carolina, on December 18.
Born: 1972 | Died: April 10, 2025
Edwards was a long-time PR representative for Jeff Gordon throughout the driver’s lengthy NASCAR career. Eventually, Edwards would be elevated to Director of Racing Communications at Hendrick Motorsports while also working with Kyle Larson. The week of his death, Larson and HMS would find their way to an emotional victory at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Born: 1935 | Died: April 20, 2025
Petty, a neurosurgeon, was one of the most important figures in the medical side of motorsports, being honored for his many contributions to NASCAR drivers by winning the 2006 Bill France NASCAR Award of Excellence. In a statement following his passing, NASCAR said Petty “was a constant and caring figure within the NASCAR garage, lending his immense medical knowledge and skills to treat competitors every single week.”
What’s Happening?
H.A. “Humpy” Wheeler, the former President and General Manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway and innovator in fan experience, has…
Born: 1938 | Died: August 20, 2025
Wheeler is often cited as the sport’s greatest track promoter, known for pulling every string possible to make race fans feel that they must be at the track on raceday. His legendary run at Charlotte Motor Speedway includes many spectacles and stunts, and groundbreaking innovations, such as the 1992 NASCAR All-Star Race, which was the first time the race was held “under the lights.” Wheeler was chosen as the recipient of the 2026 Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR prior to his passing.
Born: 1953 | Died: October 2, 2025
Lynch helped make Talladega Superspeedway into the icon it is today during his long tenure as the track’s president and chairman. During his time at Talladega, which began in 1994 and concluded upon his retirement in 2019, the superspeedway saw many changes to its look, but continued to be one of, if not the sport’s most feared venue.
These members of the NASCAR family, among many others, were remembered throughout the year through many online notes, posts, and tributes.
Maserati’s modern return to top-level GT racing has quickly turned from a comeback story into a momentum-driven success story. As the curtain closes on an impressive 2025 campaign, the House of the Trident is now firmly focused on an even more ambitious 2026 season—one that expands its footprint globally, including a major push into North American racing.
After stepping back into closed-wheel competition in 2023, Maserati Corse has wasted little time proving it belongs. The Maserati GT2 has already delivered championships, race wins, and credibility across multiple series. In 2025, that momentum peaked with a dominant Am-class title in the GT2 European Series, where consistent performance and reliability showcased exactly what Maserati set out to achieve with its customer racing program.

What makes this resurgence notable isn’t just the trophies—it’s the structure behind it. Maserati isn’t chasing one-off headline results. Instead, it’s building a sustainable racing ecosystem that supports teams, drivers, and series organizers. That approach carries directly into 2026, when the GT2 platform will again compete in the GT2 European Series while also aligning with the broader SRO ladder system, including pathways that eventually connect to GT World Challenge competition.
For American fans, the biggest news is Maserati’s growing presence stateside. In 2026, both the Maserati GT2 and the extreme, track-only Maserati MCXtrema will be eligible for competition in the U.S.-based International GT series, competing in the GTX category. This marks a significant step for the brand, putting modern Maserati race cars on legendary circuits that resonate deeply with American motorsports culture.

The International GT calendar reads like a bucket list for road racing fans, with stops at iconic venues such as Sebring International Raceway, Road Atlanta, Road America, Watkins Glen, Laguna Seca, and Circuit of the Americas. For Maserati, this isn’t just about participation—it’s about visibility. Racing on these tracks puts the Trident in front of U.S. teams, drivers, and enthusiasts who may be encountering modern Maserati motorsport hardware up close for the first time.
Another key factor heading into 2026 is the expansion of race formats made possible by Maserati’s Endurance Pack. This update broadens the GT2’s eligibility across more championships and endurance-style events, making it more attractive to customer teams that want flexibility without sacrificing performance. In plain terms, it allows teams to race more often, in more places, with the same core platform.

All of this builds toward a symbolic milestone that gives the 2026 season extra weight. Maserati will celebrate 100 years since its first racing appearance, when the Maserati Tipo 26 debuted at the Targa Florio and won its class. A century later, Maserati is once again leaning into competition as a core part of its identity—not as a nostalgia act, but as a forward-looking performance brand.
As 2026 approaches, the message is clear: Maserati isn’t dabbling in racing. It’s committed. With a growing global schedule, expanding U.S. involvement, and proven on-track results, the Trident is positioning itself for one of the most important seasons in its modern motorsports history.
Dale Earnhardt broke down in tears after his NASCAR stardom allowed him to buy his mom, Martha, a special gift. The NASCAR legend came from humble beginnings, born to a working-class family in North Carolina.
While his father, Ralph, was a racing driver, it was Dale who would go on to alter the family’s trajectory. Earnhardt went on to become one of U.S. motorsports’ most successful and beloved names, winning the joint-most Cup Series championships (7) alongside Richard Petty and Jimmy Johnson.
Sitting at the top of NASCAR also saw Earnhardt become one of motorsport’s most marketable names. He laid the foundations for his two sons, Kerry and Dale Jr., to step into NASCAR, with the latter going on to be one of the sport’s most popular drivers ever. This popularity remains intact to this day, nearly 25 years on from his father’s tragic passing on the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500.
However, in his younger years, around Christmas time, it wasn’t a straightforward time of year for Dale Sr., who wasn’t able to spoil his family, particularly his mother, as much as he had hoped. Dale Sr.’s gifts to Martha had been modest, usually everyday plug-in items like toasters.
However, in 1980, something shifted. He experienced a moment of clarity that led to an especially emotional exchange with his mother, marking a turning point in their relationship. After winning the Winston Cup in 1980, Earnhardt bought his mom diamond earrings.
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Joe Whitlock, his manager at the time, revealed an emotional exchange he had with the NASCAR legend before passing the gift to his mother. “After he had won the Winston Cup crown, we came home, and he’s driving the car, and I’m sitting in the passenger seat,” he said.
“And he starts crying, he’s laughing and crying, it’s not a serious cry. I said, ‘What’s the matter?’ He said, ‘This is the first Christmas that I can buy my mother something that doesn’t plug into the wall.’ It was always a toaster or something. But he bought her diamond earrings.”
Martha continued wearing the earrings for decades until her passing on Christmas Day, 2021, nearly 21 years after her son’s passing. In the 2015 I Am Dale Earnhardt documentary, Martha said: “I still have my diamond earrings, yeah. And it was really a big surprise that he could even afford that, you know. But he was always springing something on you, and I thought it was just amazing how he fought to get to where he was.”
Earnhardt’s 2001 passing at the Daytona 500 left a long-lasting impact on the sport. NASCAR had lost one of its biggest and most beloved names, while the Earnhardt family lost its figurehead.
Dale Jr. finished second on the day his father had died, and his passing came in just his second full season of Cup Series racing. Despite the pain of her son’s passing, Martha watched Dale Sr. carry the torch, and though he didn’t win a Cup title like his dad, he forged a legendary path of his own.
Dale Jr. is continuing the Earnhardt legacy in NASCAR with JR Motorsports alongside his sister, Kelley. JR Motorsports has won a total of four NASCAR Xfinity Series championships in its history: 2014 (Chase Elliott), 2017 (William Byron), 2018 (Tyler Reddick), and 2024 (Justin Allgaier). The team came mighty close to going back-to-back last year, with Connor Zilisch losing to Jesse Love in Phoenix’s Championship race.
TOKYO, Dec 26, 2025 – (JCN Newswire) – Honda Motor Co., Ltd. today launched a content curation media platform, Discover Honda, on its corporate information website(1). Discover Honda is a media platform that holistically curates and clearly communicates a wide range of Honda initiatives, including Honda products, technologies, designs, and the thoughts of Honda associates who create them, as well as various corporate activities including the environment, safety and corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives.
Discover Honda URL:https://global.honda/jp/discover/ (Japanese) https://global.honda/en/discover/ (English)
Key features of Discover Honda
Discover Honda is a newly created media platform that curates (gathers) and posts articles from multiple Honda owned media(2) platforms that currently exist within the Honda corporate information website. This will enable users to access articles that were previously scattered across various owned media in one place and in a timely manner. In addition, Discover Honda will share feature articles which will compile multiple articles related to certain selected themes. For example, by selecting a single product as a theme, the feature article will enable readers to explore a series of articles written about the product from different aspects, such as technologies, designs and the thoughts of Honda associates who were involved in the development of the product. Feature articles on Discover Honda are designed to enable the readers to gain a deeper and more multifaceted understanding of the particular themes.
At its launch, Discover Honda is featuring two special articles: one on the all-new Prelude, which went on sale in Japan in September of this year, and the other on electric motorcycles. New feature articles are scheduled to be added on monthly basis.
Concept of Discover Honda
The concept behind Discover Honda is creating a ?march? (marketplace) for Honda content. Just like march? or farmers’ market brings together a wide variety of desirable items ranging from fresh foods to home goods and handmade items, Discover Honda was created with an image of a place where users can encounter articles on diverse themes and perspectives related to Honda.
In addition to its motorcycle, automobile, power products and aviation businesses, Honda is engaging in a wide range of initiatives as a comprehensive mobility company, including the development of cutting-edge space and robotics technologies, environment and safety initiatives, taking on challenges in motorsports, and corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives. By featuring articles that introduce such a wide range of activities, Discover Honda will strive to become a media platform where users can discover a variety of attractive facets of Honda ? just like people finding a variety of attractive items at a marketplace.?
This new content curation media platform was named ?Discover Honda? based on the desire of Honda for more people to visit this media site, explore the diverse activities Honda is involved in, and discover new facets of Honda.? ?
With participation of designers from the Honda Design team, the Discover Honda site was designed with a main color of orange that evokes a vibrant image, freshness, and positive energy of the marketplace. The Discover Honda logo features multiple cubes within the initial letter D, representing diverse themes users can encounter through this platform, and one of the cubes incorporates the Honda Red.?
Why Honda created Discover Honda
Since 2020, as a part of its corporate information website, Honda has been operating ?Honda Stories,? as one of the owned media platforms that communicates the current initiatives and future vision of Honda. It introduces Honda initiatives from the past, present and future, including the underlying thoughts and passions of each initiative, through interviews with Honda associates, executives and other stakeholders.
In addition to Honda Stories, Honda has been communicating a wide range of information through multiple owned media platforms:
?Honda Technology? introduces Honda technologies with more technical insights.?Honda Design? introduces initiatives related to design works?Motorsports? and ?HRC??introduce various Honda initiatives in motorsports?Honda Sports Challenge??introduces various Honda corporate sports activities.
The use of multiple owned media platforms has enabled Honda to present a single theme from multiple perspectives. However, having multiple owned media platforms created a challenge, making it difficult for users to find related articles on the same theme all at once. To address this challenge, Honda launched Discover Honda, a new content curation media platform that enables users to find related articles from multiple Honda owned media while leveraging the unique expertise of each medium.
Initially, Discover Honda will primarily curate content from Honda Stories, Honda Technology, Honda Design, Motorsports, HRC, and Honda Sports Challenge. Moving forward, Honda is planning to expand the range of owned media included in the curation.
(1) Honda corporate information website URL:?https://global.honda/jp/ (Japanese), https://global.honda/en/(English)
(2) Media produced and operated by Honda
Source: Honda Motor Co, Ltd
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This year’s Christmas proved to be a difficult one for NASCAR, owing to the events that transpired last week. With all the legal proceedings settled, it looked like Christmas would be a major celebration this year, but the tragic passing of Greg Biffle and his family proved otherwise. Grief has remained the primary theme ever since, with the Hendrick Motorsports team being among the first ones to react to the news.
While many came forward to share their message of grief, one of the most respected voices in the HMS camp remained mum. Ray Evernham, the Championship-winning crew chief for Jeff Gordon, had opted for the silent path when Biffle passed. But with Christmas festivities in full flow, the HMS icon couldn’t help but lay forth a sobering truth.
Tragedy struck NASCAR last Thursday as news surfaced of the Biffle family passing away in a plane crash alongside three others. The family of four was on its way to Florida to meet up with Garrett Mitchell, aka Cleetus McFarland, but 10 minutes into their flight, the Cessna 550 ran into trouble and couldn’t make it back to the runway safely.
Ever since, the NASCAR world has been struggling to come to terms with reality, with Mark Martin spending considerable time researching the potential reasons behind the plane’s failure.
While all that goes on, Gordon’s former crew chief decided to take to X and leave a few people teary-eyed with what he had to say.
“It’s been a rough week or so, but today is a special day. It’s Christmas, and it’s about family, it’s about being together, it’s about great memories,” said Evernham. He added, “And we don’t know how many Christmases we’re going to get. Some of the Christmases, people who start the year with us won’t be here.”
Speaking further, the iconic crew chief expressed his gratitude for the gift that life is while also being thankful for all of his friends and family, hoping to carry great memories into the new year.
Evernham’s words come just in time for “Biffmas,” an annual initiative started by Biffle that centers around spreading holiday cheer through daily cash giveaways and prizes for fans.
To make this year’s Christmas even more chilling, those close to the Biffle family ended up receiving their Christmas mail from the departed souls during the holidays.
One such incident happened with Ron Herbert of North Carolina, who received the festive season’s greetings from the Biffles in his mailbox. The mail proved to be a harsh reminder of the reality that cannot be escaped, with Evernham’s message further highlighting just how precious life is.
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